Of course, the picture also lent itself to some jokes.

Especially from people wondering if everyone was actually taking a photo of someone else...

Or wondering what Donald Trump might make of the snap.

Both candidates have spent a lot of time posing for selfies through the 2016 campaign.

Alex Wong / Getty Images

Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

Clinton has previously said selfies have changed campaigning in 2016 because she can't as easily do meet-and-greets with large crowds without being overwhelmed by photo requests.

"It's turned into the thing," Clinton told Ellen DeGeneres in January. "It used to be, you know, when I campaigned, not just for my husband, but for other people as well, and even back in the '08 campaign, you would finish an event and you would shake hands."

She said she missed hearing personal stories from voters, many of whom just decide to ask for a selfie instead.

In an interview with Esquire, she even described the phenomenon as "the tyranny of the selfie."

But Clinton shouldn't worry too much. As one eagle-eyed Twitter user pointed out, there was at least one dude in Orlando facing the front — even if he was holding a camera.